Elie Wiesel: Nobel Peace Prize Winner and Supporter of Perpetual War

Wiesel's account of the holocaust in his novel "Night" broadened the 20th century European understanding of Nazi horrors, as well as tightened world Jewry by breaking generational barriers. At the same time, Wiesel opposed Palestinian liberation, supported the illegal American invasion of Iraq, and stood beside the Rwandan dictator Kagame who is responsible for the deaths of millions.

Unfortunately, Wiesel's support for terror doesn't end in Palestine. It extends to the east in Iraq, where he legitimized the destruction of the country by saying "there were no other means" to disarm Saddam Hussein. Half a million murders later, no weapons of mass destruction were found. The primary reason Iraq was invaded was fabricated, and since this discovery many have questioned the legality of the war, including the United Nations secretary general. Wiesel was right about one thing, though: he said the Iraq invasion would "change the world," and it sure did (for worse).

While Wiesel stood on stage next to Kagame, Congolese men and women stood outside protesting him. Musavuli, one of the protestors from Friends of the Congo, said Kagame had a hand in the deaths of six million by fueling proxy armies. Ironically, Wiesel and Kagame were on stage opposing another genocide in Syria: a heinious display of selective empathy.

Wiesel was exactly what goyim politicans want us to be, and that is why he is being hailed as a man of peace despite his record directly contradicting his description. The public must remember this complicated man exactly as he was - complicated.

We must thank Wiesel's profound impact on world Jewry, as we must apply his teachings of love in "Night" to all beings who suffer, including Palestinians.